Title: First Encounter With Capital Budgeting Rules
1First Encounter WithCapital Budgeting Rules
Chapter 4
11/19/2009 224 AM
- In this chapter, we maintain the assumptions of
the previous chapter - We assume perfect markets, so we assume four
market features - 1. No differences in opinion.
- 2. No taxes.
- 3. No transaction costs.
- 4. No big sellers/buyerswe have infinitely many
clones that can buy or sell. - We assume perfect certainty, so we know what the
rates of return on every project are. - We assume equal rates of returns in each period
(year). - A capital budgeting rule is a method to decide
which projects to take and which to reject. (The
name capital budgeting is a relic.) - NPV gt 0 is the best rule.
- Other rules can make some good sense.
- Some rules that are in common use (especially
the payback rule) make much less sense. (You must
know why.)
References A First Course Corporate Finance
(Welch, 2009)
2Some Background
3Why is NPV the Right Rule?
4-1
- This was covered in 2, where you saw NPV for the
first time. - In perfect markets under certainty, a positive
NPV project is equivalent to an arbitrage
money for nothing. (Money for nothing, chicks
for free Dire Straits.) - Any alternative rule must simplify back to NPV
when financial markets become more and more
perfect and uncertainty becomes less and less. It
must be a generalization of NPV.
4Separability of Investment and Consumption
4-1A
(This is called separation (or separability) of
investment and consumption decisions. Actually,
in a perfect market, this is really separation
between investment decisions and personal
identity.)
5Robustness How Good are Approximations?
4-1A-P2
- Assume that we believe that the expected cash
flow is 500 and the expected rate of return
(cost of capital) is 20. This is a 1-year
project.
6Statistics and Capital Budgeting Rules
7The Internal Rate of Return
4-2
8Two Ways To Compute a RR
- Assume cost at 100 at time 0 and payout of 150
at time 1.
9The Internal Rate of Return
4-2
- To answer the previous question, you need a
measure that generalizes the rate of return to
more than one inflow and one outflow. The most
prominent such measure is the internal rate of
return. - IMPORTANT The IRR (internal rate of return) of a
project is defined as the rate-of-return-like-numb
er which sets the NPV equal to zero. - In the context of bonds, the IRR is also called
the Yield-To-Maturity (YTM). - Example C0 -1316, C1 7, C2 8. Solve
- IRR is in common use. You must understand it
inside-out.
10The Concept of IRR
4-2
- The IRR is not a rate of return in the sense
that we defined a rate of return in the first
class as a holding return, obtained from
investing C0 and later receiving Ct. - IRR is a characteristic of a projects cash
flows. It is purely a mapping fromi.e., a
summary statistic ofmany cash flows into one
single number. - Intuitively, you can consider an internal rate
of return to be sort of an time-weighted
average rate of return intrinsic to cash flows
similar to a rate of return. -
- Multiplying each and every cash flow by the same
factor, positive or negative, will not change the
IRR.
11Finding the IRR
4-2
- There is no general algebraic formula for many
cash flows. - The solution is the answer to a polynomial. With
two many cash flows, its order is too high. - Manual Iteration intelligent trial-and-error.
- Do an example
- Computer-accomplished iteration Excel,
Openoffice, Financial Calculators. - I will not ask you a difficult question to find
an IRR. Thus, a financial calculator will not be
of much help. - In Excel, this function is called IRR. Example
use is in the book.
12More IRR Problems
4-2A
13Graphical IRR
14Obscure Problems?
4-2A
- Important You are guaranteed one unique IRR if
you have a first, up-front cash flow that is an
investment (a single negative number), followed
only by positive cash flows (payback). (The same
is the case in the reverse.) - This cash flow pattern is the case for financial
bonds. Thus, the YTM for a bond is usually
unique. - This cash flow pattern is also usually the case
for most normal corporate investment projects. - In the real world, there are very few projects
that have both positive and negative cash flows
that alternate many times. - But be aware of these issues.
- PS You will soon learn the difference between
promised and expected returns. An IRR based on
promised cash flows is a promised IRR. It should
never be used for capital budgeting purposes.
(You need to use expected cash flows under
uncertainty.)
15IRR as a Capital Budgeting Rule
4-2B
- Because you cannot do any better than doing
right, always using NPV is best. - The nice thing is that the rule
- Important
- Invest if IRR project gt cost of capital (IRR
elsewhere), - where the cost of capital is your prevailing
interest rate e(r), often (but not always) leads
to the same answer as the NPV rule, and thus the
correct answer. This is also the reason why IRR
has survived as a common method for capital
budgeting. - This applies to projects that are first money
out, then money in. - If you use IRR correctly and in the right
circumstances, it can not only give you the right
answer, it can also often give you nice extra
intuition. - Watch out for the sign
- Important
- Borrow if IRR of capital lt IRR elsewhere
- This applies to projects that are first money
in, then money out. - In case of sign doubts, calculate the NPV!
16More IRR Problems
4-2C
- IRR usually has one unique solution if there is
one negative cash flow upfront and only positive
or zero - cash flows in the future or vice-versa.
- Recall Uniqueness of IRR Issues. This applies
here, too. - Exclusive ProjectsWhich one?
- Which to compare to?
17IRR
4-2
- Disadvantages
- 1. There may be no IRR.
- 2. There may be multiple IRRs.
- 3. IRR is scale insensitive (which can cause
problems comparing projects). - 4. The benchmark cost of capital may be
time-varying, in which case the IRR may not be
easily comparable. - Advantages
- Your cost of capital (the prevailing E(r) does
not enter into the IRR calculation. - Thus, IRR has the advantage that you do not need
to recalculate the whole project value under
different cost-of-capital scenarios (if you want
to play around with projects before talking to
the bank).
18The Profitability Index
4-3
Time 0 1 2 Cash
Flow -13.16 7 8
- Used occasionally. Not as common as IRR.
- The profitability index is the PV of future cash
flows, divided by the - cost (made positive). Here, if r 20, then
- Here, if r 5, then
- Capital Budgeting Rule
- Invest if PI gt 1. Reject if PI lt 1.
- Often gives the same recommendation as NPV.
- Shares all the same problems as IRR.
- (What if you have alternating signs? No concept
of project scale, which is a problem for
either-or projects higher PI projects are not
necessarily better than lower PI projects.) - Does not have the advantage of IRR (cost of
capital is kept separate).
19Other Investment Rules
4-4
- The most common rule is the so-called payback
rule. It measures how long it takes to get your
money back. - Capital budgeting rule version Take projects
with shortest payback time. - Which project is better?
-
- It may be useful if managers cannot be trusted to
provide good estimates of far out future cash
flows. Its harder to lie if you have to claim
that you can prove project profitability within 1
year. - All these other rules, if used for project
accept/reject, are pretty dumb if you plan to use
them for real. They can provide some useful
background decision information, which helps for
background information, for informal
conversation, or if capital is highly
constrained. (Even in this case, a form of NPV
with a higher discount rate may be better,
though.) When the point is stark enough, they may
make the point that the NPV is very high in an
intuitive and forceful manner. - Important For the most part, you should avoid
non-NPV rules.
20Real Life Capital Budgeting Rules
4-5
- Rarely means usually nooften used incorrectly
in the real world. NPV works if correctly
applied, which is why I added the qualifier
almost to always. Of course, if you are
considering an extremely good or an extremely bad
project, almost any evaluation criterion is
likely to give you the same recommendation. (Even
a stopped clock gives you the right answer twice
a day.) - Source Campbell and Harvey, 2001.
21Homework Assignment
- 1. Reread Chapter 4.
- 2. Read Chapter 5.
- 3. Hand in all Chapter 4 end-of-chapter problems,
due in 7 days. - Additional homework Check out the interest rate
for a 6 month and a 5-year certificate of deposit
(CD) at your local bank.